Beluga whales rely on a sharp sense of hearing to communicate, to navigate and to feed. <beluga sounds> But the ocean is a noisy place. There's commercial shipping, navy sonar, oil and gas extraction, pile driving, underwater explosions.

One way to tell if all that noise is affecting belugas: capture them for a routine physical. "So it's kind of like going to the doctor's office for them, but they're also kind of abducted by aliens at the same time."

Aran Mooney, a marine biologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He and his team captured 26 belugas in Alaska's Bristol Bay for a battery of checkups, including a hearing test.

"We can play a very controlled, designed sound to the animal, a hearing test tone." <hearing test tone> Then they measured the beluga's brain response using an electrode on the animal's head.

These belugas live in a relatively pristine environment, which might explain why they aced the hearing test. Animals in noisier waters might not fare so well, Mooney says. And the same might go for belugas as the volume slowly rises in the underwater Arctic.

—Christopher Intagliata

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast. Beluga sounds provided by Manuel Castellote and Aran Mooney.]

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